Mexico's cost of living appeals to single expats and retirees โ but what about families? Schools, family healthcare, larger housing, and kids' activities change the math. Here are the actual numbers for American families living in Mexico in 2026.
The cost advantage of Mexico scales with family size in ways that US cost savings don't. Private school โ a major expense for families who want English-language education โ costs $400โ$1,200/month in Mexico versus $15,000โ$40,000/year in the US. Family healthcare insurance runs $3,000โ$6,000/year for a family of four versus $20,000+ in the US. A three-bedroom house or apartment in a safe, comfortable Mexican neighborhood costs what a studio apartment costs in many US cities.
A three-bedroom house or apartment in Mexico City (Condesa, Roma, Coyoacรกn), Guadalajara (Zapopan, Providencia), or Mรฉrida Centro runs $1,000โ$2,500/month furnished. In smaller cities like Oaxaca, San Miguel de Allende, or Puerto Vallarta, a similar property in an expat-friendly neighborhood costs $900โ$1,800/month. Buying property in Mexico as a foreigner involves a fideicomiso (bank trust) in restricted coastal zones โ the Mexico guide covers the full property purchase process. Read the property guide โ
Most American families in Mexico enroll their children in private bilingual or international schools. Monthly tuition typically runs: bilingual Mexican private schools $200โ$600/month, American curriculum international schools $500โ$1,200/month, IB (International Baccalaureate) schools $600โ$1,500/month. This compares to US private school averages of $1,200โ$3,500/month. Quality varies significantly by city โ the guide includes school categories by major expat destination with typical tuition ranges and enrollment requirements for foreign students.
Family healthcare in Mexico is one of the most significant financial advantages. A comprehensive family health insurance plan (private insurer, major medical coverage) costs $3,000โ$6,000/year for a family of four in 2026. IMSS (Mexico's social security healthcare) costs approximately $500โ$800/year per enrolled adult and covers the whole family in some configurations. For context, a comparable US family health plan costs $20,000โ$30,000/year in employer premiums plus deductibles. Pediatric specialist consultations in Mexico cost $30โ$70 per visit out of pocket. Read the full healthcare guide โ
Grocery shopping at Mexican markets and supermarkets costs roughly 40โ60% less than the US. A family of four's monthly grocery budget for home cooking runs $400โ$700 USD at Mexican prices versus $1,000โ$1,500 in the US. Imported US brands at stores like Costco (widely available in Mexico) and Walmart Mรฉxico cost more โ roughly 10โ30% above US prices. Local produce, meat, and dairy from Mexican brands and markets are significantly cheaper. Most American families end up with a hybrid shopping strategy.
A family of four (two adults, two school-age children) in Mexico City's Condesa neighborhood: rent $1,800/month, private bilingual school $1,000/month (both kids), family health insurance $500/month, groceries $600/month, utilities $150/month, domestic help $400/month (optional but common), transport $200/month. Total: approximately $4,650/month or $55,800/year. A comparable lifestyle in Austin, Denver, or Miami for the same family runs $10,000โ$14,000/month. The savings are substantial even after accounting for the cost of the move.
If your family crosses 183 days in Mexico, every member who earns income may become a Mexican tax resident. Children generally don't have income tax obligations. For working parents, the tax picture depends on whether you're employed by a US or Mexican company, whether you're self-employed, and how you structure FEIE and Foreign Tax Credit claims. The guide includes tax scenarios for dual-income American families in Mexico and covers the US Child Tax Credit eligibility for expat families. Read the full tax guide โ
Educational content only โ not tax or legal advice. This guide is an orientation document. Tax law is complex and individual situations vary. Always consult a qualified US expat CPA and a licensed local attorney before making financial, visa, or property decisions. Figures are verified as of the date shown and subject to change. Full disclaimer โ